A long stroll outdoors is one of the best ways to put your mind at rest
The quest for mental health has gone walkabout of late. The worried well and the angstily anxious are being asked to do nothing more elaborate than get off their backsides and sally forth. Forget Freud’s talking cure, the answer to our assailed brains lies in a walking cure.
First, there’s the “awe walk”, advocated by Berkeley psychology professor Dacher Keltner, author of the bestselling Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How it Can Transform Your Life. Keltner argues that walking in pursuit of “wow moments” allows our sense of self to be supplanted by something greater, a spin on the Romantic notion of the sublime.
Or you could sample the self-care-focused strolling of amiable Mancunian TikTokkers @softgirlswhohike, inclusive ambling demonstrating that “hiking doesn’t have to be hard”.
You might go “disorienteering”, allowing yourself to become lost and thus embarking upon an adventure, or consider blindfold forest-walking: you start with breath work, then developing the other senses, which yields a drug-like, hyper-visual state once the blinkers are removed. While, for repressed menfolk, there’s the Proper Blokes’ Club. Founded by a football coach, this organisation hosts nine London-based evening walks a week for men to get things off their chests, or simply march matters out, no pressure to ‘fess up.